# | Qz | NEW WORD | VP | EXAMPLE | WORD CLASS | DEFINITION | DATE/TIME ENTERED |
1 | | intransigent |
10 |
I detest her because she is so intransigent person. | ADJ | Refusing to agree or compromise; uncompromising; inflexible | 2015.04.16 15:30
|
2 | | hackneyed |
14 |
So many hackneyed jokes I heard today. | ADJ | Not interesting, funny, etc., because of being used too often : not fresh or original | 2015.04.16 15:25
|
3 | | fallacious |
8 |
She invited me to a pub on the fallacious assumption that I drink. | ADJ | containing a fallacy; logically unsound | 2015.04.16 15:19
|
4 | | decried |
10 |
She decried the way he treats her. | V | To express strong disapproval. | 2015.04.16 15:15
|
5 | | zero |
1 |
Suggest me a restaurant since I have zero cooking skills. | ADJ | having no measurable quantity or magnitude; not any. | 2015.04.16 14:57
|
6 | | pump |
2 |
Hearts work as blood pump in our bodies. | N | A machine for raising, driving, exhausting, or compressing fluids by means of a piston, plunger, or set of rotating vanes. | 2015.04.16 14:44
|
7 | | wine |
1 |
Drinking wine caused his liver to be damaged. | N | the fermented juice of grapes, made in many varieties, such as red, white, sweet, dry, still, and sparkling. | 2015.04.16 14:39
|
8 | | upset |
2 |
I am upset by her, because she is rude. | ADJ | Emotionally or physically disturbed or distressed | 2015.04.16 14:31
|
9 | | arrogant |
4 |
I don't like her since she's an arrogant girl. | ADJ | characterized by or proceeding from arrogance, or a sense of superiority, self-importance, or entitlement | 2015.04.16 04:30
|
10 | | shift |
2 |
The technician will come in order to shift the cable away. | V | Move or cause to move from one place to another, especially over a small distance | 2015.03.26 20:03
|
11 | | restricted |
3 |
Normal people have restricted access to the White House. | ADJ | Limited in extent, number, scope, or action | 2015.03.26 19:58
|
12 | | theories |
3 |
Students have learned a lot of the mathematical theories. | N | Theory is a supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based on general principles. | 2015.03.26 19:49
|
13 | | curriculum |
3 |
Dr. Smith has spent ten years developing new education curriculum | N | The subjects comprising a course of study in a school or college. | 2015.03.26 19:44
|
14 | | develop |
2 |
Students have developed their listening skills. | V | Grow or cause to grow and become more mature, advanced, or elaborate | 2015.03.26 19:40
|
15 | | intelligence |
3 |
Students have improved their intelligence during the program. | N | the ability to learn or understand things or to deal with new or difficult situations | 2015.03.26 19:36
|
16 | | distress |
4 |
Although she had undergone three accidents during the last two days, she doesn't have any distress. | N | great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble. | 2015.03.15 13:40
|
17 | | undergo |
3 |
The experience I had undergone thought me a great lesson. | V | to experience, endure, or sustain: to undergo a dramatic change of feelings | 2015.03.15 13:18
|
18 | | extensive |
3 |
Some people haven't extensively described their private problems. | ADJ | having a large extent, area, scope, degree, etc; vast: extensive deserts, an extensive inheritance | 2015.03.15 13:11
|
19 | | abandon |
3 |
Between 1931 and 1936 all nations abandoned the gold standard. | V | To leave completely and finally. | 2015.03.10 09:31
|